Sunday 6 April 2014

6 April 2014

Hello everyone,

The last week seems to have been relatively quiet, news-wise.

The mystery of Flight MH370


The search for missing plane MH370 continues in the Indian Ocean, now about 1,500 kms north-west of Perth, Western Australia. Lots of debris inspected, but nothing from this aircraft yet.

Yesterday one of the Chinese search vessels, Hai Xun 01, picked up a sonar signal for 90 seconds. Nothing has been confirmed yet.  Fingers crossed that this might be a break-through, as the batteries powering the sonar signal on the 'black box' are expected to cease tomorrow.

The search area has moved north.

Chinese ship Hai Xun 01 searching the Indian Ocean, detected a sonar signal yesterday.   Let's hope it's a solid lead.

Cuba


A few days ago Cuba adopted a new Foreign Investment Law, continuing the liberalising which started a couple of years ago and has seen the mushrooming of small private businesses.  Wonder what Fidel thinks of his brother's actions?

Is North Korea now the last bastion of true economic communism?

Qing Ming Festival


Yesterday, 5 April 2014, was Qing Ming Festival.  The University has given staff & students three 3 days off (yesterday, today and tomorrow).

The Qing Ming Festival (Chinese: 清明; pinyin: Qīngmíng Jié),  is celebrated 104 days after the winter solstice - it usually occurs in early April in the Gregorian calendar.  This festival is also known as Clear Bright Festival, Ancestors Day, or Tomb Sweeping Day.  

It is the day to commemorate one's ancestors, a bit like All Souls Day in Western countries.  

The Qing Ming festival dates back over 2,500 years.  After being suspended for several decades, this festival was reinstated as a national public holiday in 2008.

Observances include the cleaning and sweeping of graves of ancestors, offering food and burning paper money and other paper gifts for the deceased so that they are comfortable in ‘heaven’.

A cemetery in Beijing during Qing Ming Festival.

A family honoring ancestors at a cemetery in the countryside.

But this is the more common sight these days, as cremation (rather than burial) is now almost universal in China.

Burning paper imitation money is common, to ensure that ancestors have enough money for their needs.

Paper replicas of mobile phones being burnt, to ensure ancestors have phones should they need them.

This man's lucky ancestors got a 4 storey house!

It is estimated that more than 1,000 tonnes of paper products costing more than Y10 billion ($1.6b) are burned as offerings during the Qing Ming Festival period. 

Burning paper imitation-money has long been a tradition, but now there are many other paper products on offer, such as imitations of Gucci bags, Ferrari cars, Rolex watches, iPhones, garments, wine and cigarettes.  You can even buy paper cut-outs of concubines and nannies, to ensure that ancestors have everything they need to be comfortable in the after-life.

I remember a couple of years ago a bizarre story in the China Daily that a family bought the body of a young woman who had died recently, and on Qing Ming buried her next to their just-deceased 17 year old son.  They wanted him to have a ‘bride’ to keep him company in the after-life.  But grave robbers dug up her body and sold it to another needy family!

Special food


Of course, it wouldn't be China if there weren't traditional food involved.  



Special green-coloured 'dumplings' with vegetarian fillings, eaten cold.

Qing tuan sweet green rice balls are popular in Jiangsu and Zhejiang Provinces during Qing Ming.
In our province of Shandong, a Qing Ming tradition is to make swallow-shaped steamed bread.
Swallow-shaped steam bread. Cute!


Qing Ming is also a time for people to celebrate the arrival of Spring (踏青 Tàqīng, "treading on the greenery").  And right on cue, the blossoms are out on our campus!  The maximum temperature today is 16C, not summer yet, but the weather is definitely warming up.

Spring has arrived on our campus.
Suddenly the trees on campus have greenery.


Poetry


To commemorate the change of season I described two poems to my Oral English classes this week: "Spring" by Gerard Manley Hopkins, followed by "Ode to Autumn" by John Keats.  There is a lot of imagery in poetry, and it took some time to explain the poems.  From the quizzical looks, I suspect the students found all this rather heavy going, but I hope my enthusiasm carried the day.

Student opinions on social issues


This week I discussed 3 interesting articles from the China Daily with my Oral English students.

First: Zhengzhou University in Henan Province, to encourage greater fitness, has introduced a program whereby the first 150 students to run 800 meters will get free breakfast. I asked the students if they thought a similar program should be introduced here by the China University of Petroleum?

Most of the students said that such a scheme would not appeal to them.  They are busy Double Major students and need their sleep.  They normally get up after 7am, have breakfast, and then make their way to the first class which starts at 8am. They usually spend less than Y5 (80 cents) for breakfast.  The trade-off of losing an hours sleep to save four or five yuan did not appeal to them.

But that doesn't address the underlying issue of physical fitness. All students have a compulsory weekly 2 hour PE class.  From their comments, my impression is that less than 50% exercise at least once a week other than the PE class (sporting activities such as table tennis, volleyball, yoga, jogging, etc).  When I walk around the campus I always see students playing games such as basketball, football (soccer), tennis, and in-line skating and I formed the opinion that students are generally pretty fit. But, if the students in my Oral English classes are representative, then only a minority of students on the campus actually get much regular exercise.  Most are engrossed in study or play computer games or watch tele-movies or listen to music or sleep.

Second: A young man attended his friend's wedding banquet in Beijing recently.  He died the following day.  His father believes that his son died from "excessive drinking" at the wedding and is suing the bridegroom for compensation of Y720,000 ($116,000).

About 80% of the students didn't think that the father should get compensation from the bridegroom.  They admitted that in China there is often much drinking at social functions.  But the son was an adult and it was his own responsibility to manage his intake.

About 20% of the students thought that the father should get some compensation on the basis of shared responsibility, but less than the amount requested.  It will be very interesting to see how the court rules on this case.

Third: A woman in Beijing was married with a child.  She fell in love with a married man who also had a child.  They divorced their partners and lived together.  Subsequently the woman had a son, while still single.  So she contravened the one-child law and also the social taboo of having a child out of wedlock. The authorities levied a 'social maintenance fee' of Y330,000 ($53,000) for her transgressions.  But she is low-income and hasn't been able to pay the fine.

Because she hasn't paid the fine, the Beijing government has refused to issue a residence permit (called a hukou) to her son, now aged 8 years.  A hukou is very important - for example, you can't attend a government school without a valid hukou.  In this country, without a hukou you are basically a non-person, existing only on the fringes of society.

Last year she met a sympathetic lawyer who agreed to help her.  On 9 October 2013 they took the local district office to court, arguing that China's Household Registration and Nationality Law requires that a hukou be issued to every citizen.  On 14 February 2014 the court found against the plaintiff, saying that the Beijing government had the right to impose preconditions such as the payment of an outstanding fine.  The woman and her lawyer have lodged an appeal.

A clear majority, about 65%, of the students agreed with the court's decision.  They said that the woman had broken the One Child Law and also had exhibited bad morality by having a child out of wedlock.  She deserved to be punished and knew the punishment.  It was too bad about the boy - he was collateral damage.  But if you start making exceptions where will it end?  Better to enforce the rules strictly.

The other 35% of students felt that the boy should be given a hukou.  He was an innocent party and should not suffer for the rest of his life for something his mother did.

There was a clear division along gender lines.  Almost all the girls agreed with the court's decision, and almost all the boys supported the boy getting a hukou.  That was a surprise - I didn't expect such a division along gender lines.  Chinese girls are unexpectedly tough ... protectors of the nation's morality?

According to the article in the China Daily, there are about 13 million children in China who, for one reason or another, don't have a hukou.  Can you imagine, about 50% of Australia's population living in "limbo"?

Fast Eddie


Just 3 weeks old and already looking for a game of footy ......

Photo


...

Well, that's it for another week.  When I started this post I didn't think I had anything to write about, but there's always something, isn't there?

Best wishes and keep smiling,

alex & vera olah
English teachers at the China University of Petroleum, Qingdao.
Sunday 6 April 2014









Sunday 30 March 2014

30 March 2014

Hello everyone,

My 5th post.  My original thought in starting this blog in February 2014 was to do a post at the end of each month.  But there was so much happening that I decided to try doing a weekly post.

I've enjoyed doing the posts, but am starting to feel that the blog is sort of taking over.  Maybe I'm being a bit too ambitious in trying to cover too many things?  I'll see how things go, but am thinking that perhaps a fortnightly post might be better.  What do you think?

Many of you have sent emails commenting on the new blog.  Thank you for your feedback.  I always enjoy getting comments, so please keep them coming.

What made the news in March 2014


Because I don’t read Chinese, the sources of my local news are mainly the China Daily English language newspaper and the English news channel on CCTV (both government institutions).  It is well to remember that the Government (read: Communist Party of China) directly or indirectly controls the media in China, and the fundamental role of these institutions is to support the Party and the leaders.

Activities of the top leaders, especially the President Xi Jin Ping and Premier Li Ke Qiang, always get extensive coverage in the media.  For example, President Xi’s speech in Paris on 28 March to mark the 50th anniversary of bilateral ties was replayed in full on CCTV (with an English translation on CCTV’s English News channel).  Likewise, his speech at UNESCO was also replayed in full (it was actually a thoughtful speech about different cultures and civilizations – worth a look).

Other news sources I often check are ABC News (abc.net.au) and The Economist, as well as some other Australian and international web sites. 

Note that the events shown in the tables below usually happened the day before the date shown - the date reflects the date it appeared in the news which is often the day after it occurred.

Highlights in March 2014

  • Local headlines for the first 2 weeks of March were dominated by the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress (NPC).  Other major stories during the month were:
  • The disappearance of Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 on 8 March was closely followed in the local media because 68% of the passengers were Chinese.
  • The unfolding drama between the Ukraine + EU + USA and Russia over the referendum in Crimea and Crimea’s subsequent incorporation into the Russian Federation.
  • Michelle Obama arrived on 20 March for a one-week visit (see photos in 23 March post).
  • President Xi Jin Ping visited Europe 22 – 31 March. 
  • For vera and me, the big news during March was the birth of Eddie Olah on 14 March 2014. 

Here is a summary of issues which made the news in China in March 2014.

(a) International
1 Mar
Ousted Ukrainian President, Viktor Yanukovych, holds media conference in Russia.  Russia’s Parliament authorises the use of armed forces ‘to protect ethnic Russians in the Ukraine.”  Acting Ukraine President Yatseniuk described Russian troops in Crimea as an act of war.

2 Mar
Roger Federer won in Dubai, his 78th ATP win.  Jimmy Connors has most ATP wins with 109, followed by Ivan Lendl with 94, Federer with 78, and John McEnroe 77.

2 Mar
Oscars awarded in Hollywood.  Cate Blanchette got Best Actress and Matthew McConaughey Best Actor.  Best movie: 12 Years a Slave.

3 Mar
Oscar (Blade Runner) Pistorius trial starts for murdering girlfriend Steenkamp last year.

9 Mar
Referendum in Crimea on future links with Russia. 18 March Russia moves to incorporate Crimea after overwhelming vote in referendum.  EU and USA impose sanctions on leading Russians.  22 March EU signed “political association agreement” with Ukraine.

12 Mar
Prime Minister of New Zealand announced a referendum on a new flag within 3 years.

17 Mar
Smog shrouds much of France and into Belgium and Germany.  Paris restricted car use.

17 Mar
Demonstrations continue in Venezuela.  28 killed in last 6 weeks.

19 Mar
NZ Prime Minister John Key official visit to China.  Dairy exports to China booming.

19 Mar
Thailand lifted State of Emergency as protests diminish.  23 dead over last 3 months.

24 Mar
17 days after its disappearance, announcement by Malaysian PM Hajib Razak that evidence from British company Inmarsat showed that flight MH370 crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, far from land.  The implication was that all died.  Chinese families refused to accept this conclusion without any concrete proof (like wreckage).

24 Mar
Adam Scott blew a 3 shot lead going into the last round to come 3rd in the Arnold Palmer Invitational Golf Tournament in Miami.  He is so close to becoming World #1.

26 Mar
Big land-slide near Arlington, Washington State destroyed houses.  27 dead; many still missing.

27 Mar
China/France celebrated 50th anniversary of recognition. President Xi in Paris.

27 Mar
Bayern Munich football team claimed its 24th German League title – the fastest ever with 7 rounds still to go in the competition.  The taem has won 52 consecutive games.

28 Mar
South Korea gave to China the remains of 437 Chinese Peoples Volunteers who died in the Korean War (1950 – 3).

28 Mar
After almost 4 decades of conflict, the Philippine Government signed a peace treaty with the largest of the rebel groups, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. By mid-2016 a new semi-autonomous region called Bangsamoro will be created in Mindanao, but it will be a secular state (not based on Islamic law).

28 Mar
Egypt’s Defence Minister and Chief of Military, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi announced that he was resigning from the army to contest the coming Presidential elections.

28 Mar
The Annual Laureus Sporting Awards were presented in Kuala Lumpur.  Sebastian Vettel was named Sportsman of the Year for winning 13 of 19 F1 races in 2013; Missy Franklin (only 18 years old) was named Sportswoman of the Year for her 6 gold medals at the World Swimming Championships in Barcelona last year; Bayern Munich was named Team of the Year for winning three titles: the Bundesliga, the Champions League, and the German Cup.  The team also won the World Club championship.


(b) Local Chinese
1 Mar
Attack by a gang of 5 terrorists at Kunming Railway Station killed 29 and injured 143.  The government blamed Uygur separatist extremists from Xinjiang.  On 20 March the East Turkestan Islamic Movement released video supporting the attack.

1 Mar
2014 world steel demand estimated at 1.52 billion tonnes, with China 47% of total.  Major sectors in China: construction 490 mt; machinery 140 mt; automotive 51 mt.  2013 China imported 820 mt of iron ore at average price of $128.

1 Mar
As quid pro quo, China released report “The human rights record of the USA in 2013.”

5 – 13 Mar
Annual meeting of the National People’s Congress in Beijing. Fu Ying spokesperson.  Target for GDP growth in 2014 is 7.5%.  Many reforms to continue, such as relaxation of the one-child policy; hukou system; five private banks; anti-corruption drive; war on pollution; rural reforms; keep urban unemployment below 4.6%; cut red tape.  The Premier’s work report was adopted by the NPC: 2,887 for, 15 against, 5 abstentions.

5 Mar
Tennis champion Li Na (currently World #2) launched her autobiography; she has 22.4 million followers on Sina Weibo.

6 Mar
New US Consulate General opened in Guangzhou.  7 buildings. Cost $267 million.

8 Mar
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflow during 2013 totalled $118 billion.

10 Mar
Ministry of Environment announced that only 3 of 74 major cities met the national standard for good air in 2013.

11 Mar
The Confucius Institute now has 435 offices in 117 countries.

11 Mar
Share market weak; Shanghai Composite Index slipped below 2,000. 

11 Mar
Sales of Passenger Motor Vehicles in February 2014 totalled 1.3 million.  Mercedes Benz 17,596; Audi 32,358; GM 257,770; Ford 73,040.

14 Mar
At the end of 2013, 413,900 Chinese were studying overseas, almost 60% in the USA.

15 Mar
Average monthly white collar salaries:  Shanghai Y7,200 ($1,170); Beijing Y6,900.

18 Mar
Four kindergartens found giving unauthorised anti-cold medicines to students.

18 Mar
2013 urban population grew 1.2% to 53.7% of total; expected to reach 60% by 2020.

19 Mar
Max Baucus (72), new US ambassador, gave press conference.
19 Mar
Survey of 1.3 m Beijing school students: 22% obese; 63% poor eyesight.
20 Mar
A businessman paid almost $2 million for a Tibetan mastiff dog.
20 Mar
The Chinese Yuan depreciated 2.6% in the last 2 months, falling to 6.2 per US$.  Central Bank denied that it was manipulating the currency to ‘punish speculators’.  The Yuan has steadily appreciated against the US dollar for 10 years - first depreciation.

21 Mar
Michelle Obama accompanied by her daughters and mother arrived for a one week visit (Beijing, Xian, Chengdu).

22 - 31 Mar
President Xi Jin Ping commenced official visit to Europe: Netherlands (bilateral visit, and also attend the International Nuclear Security Summit), France (bilateral visit to mark 50th anniversary of ties; also meet with UNESCO), Brussels (EU); Germany. 

22 Mar
Estimated 110 million Chinese don’t have access to safe drinking water. Govt priority.

22 Mar
2013 China consumed 169 billion cubic metres of natural gas, of which 53 bcm was imported.  Proven reserves now 616 billion cm.  The huge Long Wang Miao gas field in Sichuan is being developed.

24 Mar
China is pushing ahead with an optic-fibre high-speed internet network: 170 million households already connected; another 30 m to be connected in 2014.

24 Mar
Another man tested positive for H7N9 bird flu in Guangdong. So far this year 120 human cases and 36 deaths in China.

24 Mar
The cherry blossoms at Wuhan University attracted 100,000 visitors yesterday, despite the new entry charge of Y20 ($3.20) per person.

24 Mar
At the end of 2013 China had an estimated 127 million passenger motor vehicles, 80% privately owned.

25 Mar
From 1 April Shenzhen will fine people who litter or spit in public Y50 ($6.50).

27 Mar
The National Common Language Regulation will come into force on 1 April.  Civil servants will have to use Standard Mandarin in their workplaces instead of local dialects.

27 Mar
Two German companies have acquired naming rights of prominent public entertainment venues in Shanghai.  The “Mercedes Benz Arena” hosts large concerts like the Rolling Stones; the “Sennheiser Shanghai Concert Hall” is the venue for 200 symphony and other concerts a year.



April Fools Day joke?


Surely this can't be true?  Was it an early April Fools Day joke?

I was flabbergasted on 26 March when I read the news of Prime Minister Abbott's decision to reinstate knighthoods in Australia. Surely that's something from another, bygone era; just doesn't seem appropriate in the 21st century.  A retrograde move, in my opinion. Back to the Future.

The mystery of the disappearance of Flight MH370


At 10pm on Monday 24 March, 17 days after it disappeared, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced that MH370 had taken the 'southern corridor' and had ended up (crashed) in the southern Indian Ocean.

All eyes turned to Perth, Australia.  Planes, ships, and satellites from Australia, New Zealand, China, USA, UK, and other countries are involved in the search.  The search area is far off the coast of Western Australia, in very difficult conditions.  While satellites have noted debris which could have come from MH370, no concrete evidence has yet been salvaged. The search goes on.

New target area, closer to Perth, identified on 28 March.

The reaction of the waiting families to the PM Razak's remarks was very different.  The Malaysians appeared to accept the announcement fairly calmly ('it's God's will'; 'it's fate'); but the Chinese families angrily rejected it: "It can't be true, there is no evidence yet!".  The following day the group at the Lido Hotel marched on the Malaysian Embassy in Beijing and demanded more answers.

I asked some of my students why the Chinese relatives didn't accept the conclusion that MH370 had crashed and there were no survivors?  After all, the whole world has been searching for this plane for more than 2 weeks, and nothing has been found.   The students said that the Chinese families were angry and frustrated at the way the search has been conducted by Malaysian authorities, and the often-inadequate information which has been provided.  Until concrete evidence is found, they want to cling onto hope that their loved ones may yet be found.

Some observers are wondering if the emotional and aggressive behaviour of the Chinese relatives is to gain more sympathy in the hope of eventually receiving greater compensation? I am not cynical enough to think that, yet.

Media reports say a group of 29 relatives are flying from Beijing to KL today. What can they hope to achieve there, after 3 weeks?  Perhaps they fear that after so long without result, the search may be wound down, and the relatives want to keep pressure on the Malaysians and others to continue the search.  But can it go on indefinitely?

As I write this post on the afternoon of Sunday 30 March much debris has been sighted off the coast of Western Australia, but nothing concrete from MH370 has been found so far.  It is now 23 days since the plane disappeared.  I wonder if this plane or the black boxes will ever be found?

This week 'vultures' arrived in Beijing - lawyers from the USA - wanting to sign up the families for litigation.  Ugly.

A footnote. An Aussie friend teaching at another university in Qingdao told me that his daughter flew on Malaysian Airlines from KL to Bangkok last year.  She was invited into the cockpit and actually stayed there for the landing as well.  Guess who the co-pilot was?  The same guy as on MH370.

Kit Kat King




Paul Bulcke CEO of Nestle visited Beijing recently and an interview appeared in the China Daily on 27 March.  He is a Belgian, speaks 6 languages, joined Nestle in 1979 and worked in Germany, Portugal and Peru.  Became CEO in 2008.  Nestle has 33 factories in China with sales of about $7 billion per annum (they were disappointed with growth of only 29% last year!).

But it was Nestle's overall size which caught my eye.  In 2013 worldwide sales totalled $105 billion!  That's a lot of Kit Kats and cups of Nescafe!  More than the GDP of many countries.  In fact, based on the World Bank's calculation of GDP/PPP, Nestle would be the 73rd biggest economy in the world (out of 220) and sit between Tunisia and Bulgaria!

An extraordinary company.

Paul Bulcke's favorite saying is "Simplicity has many charms."  Given our simple life here (no car, no kitchen, little money), we can relate to that.

Vanessa Mae


This is a bit of relatively old news - but I only became aware of it recently.

Vanessa Mae (Thai father & Singapore mother, grew up in the UK and lives in London) is very well known as a wonderfully talented violinist, but I didn't realise she is a champion skier as well.

I missed this during the Sochi Winter Olympics in February, and was amazed to read about it a couple of days ago.

From this....

World renowned violinist

to this....

Representing Thailand in the opening parade of the Sochi Winter Olympics



and this.....

Competing in the Giant Slalom


The finish! 

According to the article I read, Vanessa Mae decided last year, at the ripe old age of 35, to compete in the Winter Olympics.  She started skiing at an early age, but had never raced.  The German Women's Olympic Ski Team let her train with them  With just 6 months preparation she competed in the Giant Slalom at Sochi.  She came last, 67th, but 23 other competitors didn't even finish.  A very creditable effort, don't you think?

She told the journalist "It's great to have this new experience ... I want to challenge myself ... life without taking risks is no fun."

What a gal!!!
 ...

That's a good note on which to finish.  Keep well, and keep smiling.

Our best wishes from Qingdao, China

Vera & Alex Olah
Teaching English at the China University of Petroleum
Sunday 30 March 2014




Friday 28 March 2014

28 March 2014

Hello everyone,

My 4th post - slowly getting used to blogging.

Note: all dollars are US$.  The exchange rate I am using at the moment is US$1 = Yuan 6.2

I shouldn't have said anything about Spring arriving in the last post - the following morning 24 March dawned grey and cold and then rain arrived on 25 March.  Jinxed it! We have put away the long-johns, but it looks as if it will be a while yet before we are wearing shorts.....

At the end of each month I will include lists of key events, international and Chinese, which took place.  We live in an age of 'information overload' and I find that unless I compile such lists important events quickly become a blur.

Today's post focuses on students and teaching.  We have just completed the 5th week of this semester (30% of the way through already!) and I have compiled information on my students which is provided below.

I will do another post over the weekend which will focus on news items.

China University of Petroleum, Qingdao, Shandong Province (www.upc.edu.cn )


A brief introduction of the China University of Petroleum (UPC).

UPC has two campuses, one in Dongying and the other in Qingdao, both in Shandong Province (roughly half way between Beijing and Shanghai).  Our campus is located about 30 km south of Qingdao City, in the suburb of Huangdao.  The campus is on Tang Dao Wan Bay - see map below.  We are very fortunate to be right on the coast, which makes for a fairly temperate climate and relatively fresh air.


The campus of China University of Petroleum is across the road from Tang Dao Wan Bay.

The main gate (North Gate) of UPC with the tall Administration Building in the background.

The symbol of UPC is the 'Goddess of the Sun', the provider of nature's bounty such as oil and gas resources.

The emblem of UPC incorporates the Goddess of the Sun symbol. The university was founded in 1953.
UPC has about 20,000 undergraduates and 5,000 post graduates and a teaching staff of about 1,500.  As the name implies, it focuses on subjects related to oil and gas, such as Petroleum Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Geology, etc.  But it also has other faculties such as Languages, Finance, and Administration.

UPC is one of three key universities in Shandong Province which are directly administered by the Ministry of Education in Beijing.  They are Shandong University in Jinan, and Ocean University and China University of Petroleum which are both located in Qingdao.

Vera and I had one year in Dongying (2009-10), and this is our third year teaching on the Qingdao campus.


My teaching schedule, February to June 2014


At the moment I have 6 classes a week (expect to get 2 more in April).  My teaching schedule is:
Monday, 7 – 9pm (NM65, Western Culture)
Tuesday, 7 – 9pm (DM1202, Oral English)
Wednesday, 4 – 6pm (DM1202, Oral English)
Thursday, 4 – 6pm DM1202, Oral); 7 – 9pm (NM224, Culture)
Saturday, 7 – 9pm (DM1201, Oral).

Unusually, this semester I have 4 night classes, and no morning classes.  Thursdays are a bit tight with only an hour for dinner between classes.

I am still getting used to teaching on Saturday nights.  Actually, I asked the students if they wanted to change the time to Saturday morning or afternoon, but they preferred to stay with Saturday night.  Ugh!  These kids are keen - can you imagine Australian or American college students going to class 7 - 9pm on Saturday night?  No way.

Teaching the night class can be challenging.  It is the end of a long day for the students, and many are tired.  I recall when I had night classes (almost 50 years ago!), despite my best efforts I would always drift off for a few minutes about half an hour into the lecture.  I try my best to make the classes interesting but often see students nodding off.  

Still, I’m happy with my teaching schedule this semester.  Twelve hours a week has been pretty cruisy, and I've had a lot of time for personal activities (such as starting this blog!).

Yesterday I heard that a group of 28 staff from the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) will arrive in 2 weeks to start a three month intensive English course and I have been asked to take them for 3 classes (6 hours) a week.  So, my relaxed lifestyle is about to come to an abrupt end.

Still, even 18 hours a week should be fine. Chinese students are dedicated and respectful, and I enjoy teaching them.  An adult group will be different, but should provide opportunities for interesting discussions.

Foreign teachers at this university are paid a basic Y2,000 per month plus Y50 for each teaching hour.  So at the moment with 12 hours a week I am earning Y500 + Y600 = Y1,100 ($180) per week. Our accommodation is two rooms in one of the residential buildings on campus and is free. We don't pay for utilities such as electricity, but we pay for our own drinking water and meals.  We don't have a kitchen, so eat in student dining halls or sometimes at restaurants outside the campus.

My pay of $180 per week doesn't sound like much, but the cost of living is low and Vera and I can manage easily on my salary, except for our regular trips back home which we have to fund from our own sources.

My impression is that my pay is about average in urban China.  One of the American teachers is married to a local girl, who has a clerical job in the university's foreign students section - she has a college degree and good English - her salary is about $80 per week.  So I am not doing too badly compared to her.

It's nice to be in a place where you can still get a meal for under $2 and it costs 15 cents to ride the bus across town.

The following table contains an overview of my classes this semester.

Summaries of Alex’s classes, February – June 2014


Double Major 1201

Double Major 1202
Non Major 65
Non Major 224
Course
Oral English
Oral English
Western Culture
Western Culture





Hours per week
4
4
2
2





Number in class
42
41
60
60
% girls
60%
76%
33%
27%
% boys
40%
24%
67%
73%





Main major




Petroleum Engineering
9%
6%
18%
43%
Storage Engineering
14%
-
3%
2%
Control Engineering
5%
9%
6%
2%
Safety Engineering
2%
9%
6%
-
Resource Engineering
9%
11%
3%
10%
Law
14%
2%
-
-
Other majors
47%
63%
64%
43%





Left handed
5%
0%
7%
5%





Drivers licence
12%
8%
13%
17%





Given name




One character
33%
33%
27%
32%
Two characters
67%
67%
73%
68%





Home Province




Shandong
67%

54%

42%

26%

Other provinces
33%
(6 other)
46%
(11 other)
58%
(19 other)
74%
(18 other)





Parents jobs




Farmers
14%
17%
28%
30%
Workers
35%
33%
37%
24%
Business
11%
14%
4%
8%
Teachers
11%
9%
10%
14%
Doctor / nurse
5%
10%
2%
3%
Other
24%
17%
19%
21%





Hobbies
(most popular)




1st
Movies
Reading
Movies
Reading
2nd
Reading
Movies
Basketball
Basketball
3rd
Music
Shopping
Reading
Music
4th
Jogging
Music
Music
Movies
5th
Swimming
Sleeping
Football
Football


Comments on class summaries


Double Majors
These students are doing 2 majors:  their ‘main’ major (such as Petroleum Engineering) and English as their ‘minor’ major. They have to be in the top 30% of their main majors before they are admitted into Double Major.  They are the busiest students on campus, with over 40 'contact hours' of lectures a week (see example of weekly schedule below for details).

Double Majors will graduate with two degrees: one for their main major (eg Bachelor of Science in Petroleum Engineering) and the other for English (ie a Bachelor of Arts in English).  I think we call this a Double Degree in Australia.

I’m intrigued that there are more girls than boys in the Double Major classes because most of the students come from Engineering and there are 4 or 5 times as many boys doing those courses.  I guess girls are more interested in English (and better at it) and maybe they also have to get that extra edge to compete with boys in the job market.  But I am still surprised that, relatively, so many more girls are willing (and able) to take on the additional burden of a second major.

The students in my Double Major classes are Sophomores – that is, in the 2nd year of a four year degree.

Non Majors
These students come from a variety of majors.  All students can apply to do one or two “optional” or “elective” classes each semester.  They can select from a wide range including Chinese History; Western Music; Calligraphy; Multimedia; Marketing; Finance; Psychology; Western Culture; etc. 

About 150 students applied to do each of my Culture classes, and 60 were successful.  The course will go for 16 weeks, with the final exam in Week 17.

Most of the students are Juniors (in 3rd Year), with some Sophomores (2nd Year).  Previously I have also had some Seniors (4th Year) but not this semester.

We use the descriptor "Non Majors", but it would probably be clearer to call them Non English Majors. All  English major students do Western Culture as a compulsory unit, but students doing other majors can take it as an 'optional' unit.

Hours per week
Each class comprises 2 x 50 minute lessons.  The Double Major students have 2 Oral English classes a week, and the Non Major students have one Western Culture class a week.

Handedness
From my research on the web, about 9 - 10% of the population in Western countries is left-handed.  My observation of Chinese college students is that the proportion of left-handedness is about 4 - 5%.   I ask this question to see how many left-handed students there are in my current classes.

Drivers licence
This is a sort of economic indicator, and I usually ask my classes how many students have drivers licences.  I’ve noticed a significant increase in the last 4 years - at that time only 1% or 2% had drivers licences - which is a reflection of the rapid economic development of China and the spreading wealth.

Given names
Overall, about 40% of Chinese have given names of one character and 60% have two characters.  I like to see how my students compare to the aggregate.
.
Home Province
I am interested to know which area of China my students come from.  The University of Petroleum is located in Shandong Province and the greatest number (often more than 50%) come from this Province. 

Shandong Province is about the same size in area as the State of Florida in the USA, or about 70% the size of the State of Victoria and 20% the size of the State of NSW in Australia.  The 2010 census showed Shandong with a population of 96 million (the second largest Province in China by population).

Shandong Province. Our campus is near Qingdao City, on the coast of the Yellow Sea.

Parents jobs
This statistic can be a guide to the socio-economic background of the students, particularly how many students come from “the countryside”.  But it must be taken as an indication only, because these days so many farmers have jobs as “workers”.

The other point to note is that in China the descriptor “workers” is often used in a very general way, covering blue collar and white collar jobs.  So this statistic needs to be viewed with care.

Hobbies
This provides an idea of what the students like to do in their spare time.  But, again, it is an indication only as hobbies can vary greatly with time and place.  Many students say 'reading' is their main hobby, but when I delve further very few have actually read books (either paper or electronic) in recent months.  Perhaps it is more of a wish than reality in their busy study schedule?

Incidentally, 'football' refers to soccer, which is becoming popular here. It is the only kind of football they know.

A Double Major student's weekly class schedule


Weekly class schedule for a student in Double Major 1202 whose main major is Safety Engineering, February – June 2014

Time
Monday
Tuesday
Wed
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday








8 – 9.50am
Electrical engineer
Materials engineer
English (college)
Thermo-dynamics
Psychology
(optional)
Electrical engineer
-








10.10am – 12 noon
English
(college)
Thermo-dynamics
Physical education
Electrical engineer
-
-
-








2 – 3.50pm
Marxism
Chemistry
Environ
(optional)
Chemistry
Physics
Western culture
-








4.10 – 6pm
Western Culture
English (listening)
English (oral)
Marxism
Physics
News (optional)
English (reading)








7 – 8.50pm
English (listening)
English (oral)
English (listening)
Materials engineer
English (reading)
-
-

Per week: 25 normal classes plus 3 optional classes (environment, psychology, news).

Each class comprises 2 x 50 minute lessons. There is a 10 minute break between the two lessons.

So, this Double Major student has 25 classes a week which is 50 lessons (or 50 ‘contact hours’ with lecturers).  On top of that she has registered for 3 optional or elective classes which are subjects of personal interest to her.  

Some other students said they have slightly fewer classes than this girl doing Safety Engineering, but all have more than 20 classes (40 contact hours) per week.

The students said their teachers don’t allocate much homework.  Most said they do about 1.5 hours of ‘self-study’ a day, usually from 9pm when their lectures finish.  They are normally asleep by 11pm.

You can see that a Double Major has a very tough schedule.  Actually, it's more than most full time jobs; certainly doesn’t leave much time for other activities.

I asked some of the Double Major students why they had taken on such a huge burden?  Most said that a good knowledge of English is important in China today and they hoped that their English skills will give them an edge when they look for a job after graduation.

From my observation, Chinese college students have at least twice as many ‘contact hours’ with lecturers compared to Australian college students.  This is a reflection of the different approach to learning.  Here students are given much more information by lecturers, while in Australia a lecturer will normally introduce a concept and then students have to research it to develop their own understanding.

Teaching approach


A report released 6 March concluded that "...an informal environment, sited in reality, is best for learning a second language .... with a focus on active communication rather than vocabulary and grammar."

My sentiments exactly.  It reflects the teaching approach I have developed over the last 3 years.

The China Daily did a story on an unusual activity I did in my Oral English classes last year.  I asked them to compose love poems with an International Trade theme.  The journalist called it 'wacky', but I prefer to think of it as innovative or perhaps unorthodox.  What do you think?



Follow this link:  http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2013-07/05/content_16737867.htm 

...

That's all for now.

Best wishes,  alex & vera olah
Teaching English at the China University of Petroleum, Qingdao Shandong
Friday 28 March 2014